Absolutely 100 percent. Stede Bonnet is one of the best documented pirates entitely due to being the son of rich plantation owners in Barbados. Most of the lives of famous pirates are unclear at best. John Rackam said I'm from Cuba in his last fight but that's about it. Charles Vane was probably British but that's a guess. Anne Bonny is completely up in the air although my guess is London born prostitute. Blackbeard is famously a massive question mark as he's been said to be from England, North Carolina and Jamaica all without much evidence. Because homeland origin is unclear, finding them in a parish baptism record is almost impossible. All of these pirates were also lower class individuals without question, unlike Stede.
Stede was without question born in 1688, he was baptized at Christs church on July 29th, the child of Edward and Sarah Bonnet. His father died in 1694 and he married a Mary Allemby in Bridgetown Barbados on November 21 1709. He was a major in a local militia, leading to people up to his court trial calling him Major Bonnet.
I could go on but you probably know the rest of his story. Records can be lost, the record of Blackbeards crew trial was sadly lost during the burning of Richmond during the Civil War for example. But most trial documents were kept in storage and survived to this day, and church baptism and burial records have almost universally survived to the modern ages. Newspapers from the Boston Gazette and similar papers have been mostly preserved in library archives, all three sources are where legitimate pirate information comes from. All is more abundant when your rich.
So yes. Stede Bonnet is so well understood compared to far more important and famous pirates purely because he was rich and had a notable social standing.
Moss, Jeremy (2020). The Life and Tryals of the Gentleman Pirate, Major Stede Bonnet. Virginia Beach: Koehler Books.
Rennie, Neil (2013) Treasure Neverland: Real and Imagined Pirates.